Abstract

BackgroundThe prognosis of immunocompromised individuals with COVID-19 remains a significant concern. Information regarding the clinical and virological characteristics of immunocompromised patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 during the Omicron variant period is limited.MethodsMedical records of patients admitted to our hospital with COVID-19 during the Omicron (BA.1–5) epidemic were retrospectively reviewed. Clinical, virological (nasopharyngeal swabs and blood), and serological data were compared between immunocompromised patients receiving immunosuppressive medications (calcineurin inhibitors, mycophenolate mofetil, or steroids) and control patients not receiving immunosuppressive medications.ResultsTwenty-eight immunocompromised patients (25 transplant recipients) and 26 control patients were included. Fourteen of the immunocompromised patients (50%) received monoclonal antibodies. The immunocompromised group included 15 mild/moderate (53.6%), 10 severe (35.7%), and three critical (10.7%) disease severities. The mortality rate due to COVID-19 during hospitalization was 3.6% (1/28) in the immunocompromised group, with no difference between the two groups. Three cases of re-exacerbation after discharge occurred in the immunocompromised group and none in the control group. Linear regression based on nasopharyngeal real-time-PCR cycle threshold (Ct) values according to the time since symptom onset showed markedly slower viral clearance in the immunocompromised group than in the control group (Pslope = 0.078). In the immunocompromised group, patients who received monoclonal antibodies showed faster viral clearance than those who did not receive monoclonal antibodies. The convalescent anti-spike IgG titers were comparable to those in the control group in patients who received monoclonal antibodies and significantly lower than those in the control patients in patients who did not receive monoclonal antibodies (P < 0.001). The prevalence of viremia at onset was significantly higher in the immunocompromised group than in the control group (35.7%, [10/28] vs. 11.5%, [3/26]; P = 0.003). All three patients with critical disease severity in the immunocompromised group exhibited viremia, one of whom died. All three patients with viremia in the control group were critical, of whom two died.ConclusionsImmunocompromised individuals receiving immunosuppressive medications are more likely to show delayed post-infection SARS-CoV-2 viral clearance and the development of viremia, potentially resulting in worsening severity and outcomes, especially in viremic patients, even during the Omicron epidemic.

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